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February 23, 2015

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US$2m horse race attracts mainland’s elite

SINGAPORE staged its richest-ever horse race yesterday with hundreds of wealthy people from China’s mainland in attendance, raising organizers’ hopes that their growing interest in the sport will fuel a regional circuit.

The S$3.05 million (US$2.2 million) China Equine Cultural Festival Singapore Cup was won by United States-based Parranda, ridden by Belgian Christophe Soumillon.

The 1,800-meter, nine-horse race was timed to coincide with the Lunar New Year weekend, when many Chinese travel overseas.

Organizers China Horse Club said 500 Chinese guests who are “chief executives and above” as well as government officials and celebrities attended the race, alongside 12,000 others.

Teo Ah Khing, the Malaysian head of the Tianjin-based elite racing group, said the race was a test bed for plans to host a series of other international races for a similar elite Chinese crowd.

“The whole idea is to tap on a vacuum, a demand for a lot of Chinese from the mainland who travel overseas and read a lot about the big international races,” said Teo, a self-made billionaire.

“The affluent mainland Chinese want to be known as owners of stallions, owners of internationally renowned stallions,” Teo said.

Many of the high net-worth Chinese spectators donned finery, rekindling images of the centuries-old Britain’s Royal Ascot with men in crisp tailored suits and women sporting colorful hats.

The race was limited exclusively to horses from China Horse Club’s stables.

The club, which owns dozens of mares in stables around the world in partnership with Ireland’s Coolmore racing empire, has runners that have won top-tier races including in Australia, the US and France.

Teo said many of the wealthy Chinese attending the race “are interested to know what racing can bring in terms of upgrading themselves ... networking and business opportunities. The race will bring the Chinese to the world, and the world to China.”

China, with a population of 1.4 billion, had 2.4 million millionaire households in 2013, trailing only the US with 7.1 million, according to the Boston Consulting Group’s Global Wealth 2014 report.

Teo, who was involved in building Dubai’s Meydan racecourse, said the China Horse Club plans to set up a horse racing circuit aimed squarely at increasingly well-traveled wealthy Chinese who are keen on latching onto the sport for networking purposes.

The annual calendar could feature races in cities across Asia, North America, Europe and Australia, he said.

Chinese spending on international travel last year rose to US$165 billion from US$129 billion in 2013, according to latest government data.

Teo said such figures mean an international horse racing circuit catering to affluent, globetrotting Chinese and modeled after motor racing’s glitzy Formula 1, which generates about US$2 billion annually, “can be easily imagined.”

“It will be much bigger than that ... in horse racing there are thousands of stallions, so the business model in terms of size and consumption is much bigger than ... in F1,” Teo said.




 

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